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National Association of Realtors (NAR): The Ultimate Guide to the Lawsuits, Rules, and Your Rights

LEGAL DISCLAIMER: This article provides general, informational content for educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional legal advice from a qualified attorney. Always consult with a lawyer for guidance on your specific legal situation.

What is the National Association of Realtors? A 30-Second Summary

Imagine the world of real estate is a professional sport. While thousands of individual players (real estate agents) can get a license to be on the field, there's a major league that sets the rules for how the championship games are played. That league is the National Association of Realtors (NAR). For over a century, NAR has written the rulebook—its Code of Ethics—that governs how its members, who earn the title “Realtor®,” must conduct themselves. They control the main stadiums (the Multiple Listing Services, or MLS) where properties are advertised and set the traditional norms for how players get paid their commissions. For you, the fan in the stands (the home buyer or seller), this system seemed to work in the background. But recently, the referees—the U.S. courts and the department_of_justice—threw a series of massive penalty flags. They found that some of NAR's long-standing rules about commissions were anti-competitive and unfairly inflated costs for consumers. The resulting billion-dollar lawsuits and a landmark 2024 settlement have fundamentally changed the rules of the game. This guide is your new playbook, designed to explain exactly what NAR is, how these legal earthquakes affect you, and how you can use your newfound rights to make smarter real estate decisions.

The Story of NAR: A Historical Journey

The National Association of Realtors wasn't born overnight. Its story is one of a burgeoning industry trying to legitimize itself and, in doing so, creating a system that would dominate American real estate for over 100 years.

The Law on the Books: Governing Documents and the Code of Ethics

NAR is a private organization, so it is not governed by public statutes in the same way a government agency is. Instead, its power comes from its own internal governing documents, which all members agree to abide by. The cornerstone of this entire structure is the Code of Ethics. The NAR Code of Ethics is a detailed document that functions as the law of the land for Realtors®. It is a living document, updated annually, that goes far beyond the basic requirements of state licensing laws. It is divided into 17 Articles that cover three major areas: Duties to Clients and Customers, Duties to the Public, and Duties to other Realtors®. Let's look at a key example:

Article 1: “When representing a buyer, seller, landlord, tenant, or other client as an agent, Realtors® pledge themselves to protect and promote the interests of their client. This obligation to the client is primary, but it does not relieve Realtors® of their obligation to treat all parties honestly.”

In plain English: This establishes the concept of fiduciary_duty. It means your Realtor® must legally put your financial interests ahead of everyone else's, including their own. If they know something that could hurt your position (like the seller is desperate and would accept a lower offer), they are ethically bound to tell you. However, they still can't lie to the other party. This single article is the foundation of the trust you place in a Realtor®.

A Nation of Contrasts: The Three-Tiered Structure

A common point of confusion is where NAR ends and a state or local group begins. The system is a hierarchy, and when an agent becomes a Realtor®, they are typically required to join all three levels.

Level Who Are They? Primary Role & Impact on You
National (NAR) The National Association of Realtors® Sets the nationwide Code of Ethics, provides broad professional development, and runs the largest political lobbying arm (RPAC) in Washington D.C. to influence national housing policy. Their rules form the basis for everything else.
State (e.g., California Association of Realtors® - C.A.R.) 54 state and territory associations Creates state-specific legal forms and contracts (like your purchase agreement), lobbies the state legislature, and provides state-level legal hotlines and resources. They write the paperwork you actually sign.
Local (e.g., San Francisco Association of Realtors®) Over 1,000 local boards or associations Operates the local multiple_listing_service_(mls), handles ethics complaints and commission disputes, and provides local market data and networking. This is who you complain to if you have a problem.

What this means for you: If you have an ethical complaint against a Realtor® in Austin, you don't file it with the national NAR office. You file it with the Austin Board of Realtors (ABOR), which will use NAR's Code of Ethics and procedures to adjudicate your case.

Part 2: Deconstructing NAR's Core Elements and Influence

The Anatomy of NAR: Code, MLS, and Lobbying

NAR's immense power is built on three pillars: its ethical code, its control over data via the MLS, and its political influence.

Element 1: The Code of Ethics

As discussed, this is the professional rulebook. It's more than just a dusty document; it has real teeth. Violations can lead to fines, mandatory retraining, suspension, or even expulsion from the association, which can be a career-ending event for an agent who relies on MLS access. The Code is the primary mechanism through which NAR enforces a baseline of professionalism and consumer protection across the country.

Element 2: The Multiple Listing Service (MLS)

The MLS is the lifeblood of the residential real estate market. It's a private database created and maintained by local Realtor® associations where listing agents post detailed information about properties for sale. Crucially, it's also where they traditionally posted the offer of compensation to the agent who brings the buyer.

Element 3: Political Advocacy (RPAC)

The Realtors Political Action Committee (RPAC) is NAR's lobbying arm. It is consistently one of the largest and most influential PACs in the United States. RPAC raises millions of dollars from Realtor® members and uses it to support political candidates (of both parties) who align with NAR's policy goals. These goals often include preserving the mortgage interest tax deduction, opposing burdensome regulations on property development, and promoting private property rights. This political power allows NAR to shape the legal and financial landscape of real estate on a national scale.

The Players on the Field: Who's Who in the NAR Ecosystem

Part 3: Your Practical Playbook as a Consumer

Step-by-Step: What to Do if You Have a Problem with a Realtor®

If you believe your Realtor® has acted unethically, you have a formal recourse through the local Realtor® association. This process is designed to be accessible to the public without needing a lawyer.

Step 1: Try to Resolve it Directly

Before escalating, have a calm, direct conversation with your agent. If that fails, speak with their managing broker. The broker is responsible for the agents under their supervision and can often resolve issues quickly. Document these conversations with dates and notes.

Step 2: Identify Your Grievance: Ethics Complaint vs. Arbitration

You need to know what kind of problem you have, as this determines the path forward.

Step 3: Contact the Local Realtor® Association

Find the local association/board where the Realtor® is a member. You can usually find this on their website or by calling their office. Ask for the “Professional Standards Administrator.” This person is a staff member who can explain the process, provide the necessary forms, and answer your questions.

Step 4: File the Formal Ethics Complaint

You will need to fill out a form detailing your complaint.

Step 5: The Grievance Committee and Hearing

First, a Grievance Committee reviews your complaint to determine if, on its face, a potential violation occurred. If it moves forward, a formal hearing is scheduled before a panel of Realtors®. You will present your case and evidence, and the Realtor® you accused will present their defense. After the hearing, the panel will decide if the Code was violated and, if so, what the sanction will be (e.g., a letter of warning, a fine, or suspension).

Essential Paperwork: Key Forms and Documents

Part 4: Landmark Cases That Shaped Today's Law

The seemingly stable world of real estate was rocked by a series of antitrust_law lawsuits that culminated in a historic shift. These cases all centered on one core issue: NAR's rules on commission sharing.

Case Study: Sitzer/Burnett v. NAR (2023)

Case Study: The Nationwide NAR Settlement (Moehrl, et al. v. NAR) (2024)

Case Study: U.S. Department of Justice v. NAR (Ongoing)

Part 5: The Future of Real Estate Post-Settlement

Today's Battlegrounds: Current Controversies and Debates

The NAR settlement didn't end the conversation; it started a new, more intense one. The entire industry is now grappling with fundamental questions:

On the Horizon: How Technology and Society are Changing the Law

The legal changes are colliding with powerful technological and social trends, creating a perfect storm of disruption.

See Also